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11 tf.t.C. Library Serials Dept, Box 870 Chaper Hill, N.C. . . Graduate Participation See Edits, Page Two Weather Cloudy and mild Offices in Graham Memorial SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Service . . i I 1 - - - - - - - -' - - : - Signs announcing the Carolina Symposium hang Aldridge, Crane Brinton, James Reston, Sen. Gale in the main lobby of the library. The Symposium McGee, John Grierson, and others, starts Sunday and lasts through Thursday. Some - Photo by Jim Wallace of this year's speakers are Richard Harkness, John Clotf elter-Wrye Endorsed or Editor Mike Mathers, who withdrev from the Daily Tar Heel editor ship race yesterday, endorsed Jim Clotf elter and Chuck Wrye for co editors. Clotfelter and Wrye will face Allen Thanks Supporters, Backs Larry McDevitt Student Body President-elect In- man - Allen voiced yesterday his appreciation to the students for their support in the election last Tuesday. Allen further stated his admira tion for the conduct of his ojpo nents during the campaign. "The quality of the campaign remained impressively high throughout the heat of opposition," he said. Allen expressed his deepest thanks to all those who actively offered their support and efforts. To the many others behind the scenes who contributed to his vote of confidence, Allen acknowledged their importance and promised to work with the student body for the, Campus Briefs P Si? II y Bead Cheerleader Anyone interested in the job of head cheerleader has been asked to contact Al Roper at 968-9027 or 942-6753. Interviews will be con ducted sometime during the next two weeks. Film Society Postponed The meeting of the Film Society scheduled for Monday night has been postponed until April 8 so that members may attend the Sym posium. Newman Club The- Newman' Club will meet Sunday at 5:30 for supper in the basement of St. Thomas More church. A program concerning the "Mixed Marriage" will follow, con ducted by . Rev. Arthur R. Free man, Vicar General of the Dio cese of Raleigh. ; BSU The Baptist Student Union will hold a work party Saturday after noon with students doing all sorts of jobs and proceeds going to LISTEN. Persons with jobs avail able may call 942-4266. Faculty Insurance Members of the faculty and ad ministrative staff who have not returned a reply card concerning the Faculty Disability Insurance Plan to Dr. Richardson's office, do so immediately so you can obtain first hand information on the pro gram. If you need a card or want an interview call 942-5067 at once. Dorm Presidents The polls will be open on Tues day, April 3 from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. for the runoff election. Please submit your list of poll tenders to the GM Information Office by 5:00 Sunday. OriesUUoa Interviews tor a OmsU -S : By M athers Ernest Stepp in a run-off election Tuesday. The vice-president of the student body will also be select ed Tuesday. "Only persons with experience working on the Tar Heel are able common betterment - of the entire campus. ' Finally, President-elect Allen urged that the entire student body support his running-mate, Larry (McDevitt, in the forthcoming run off election, Tuesday. Allen cited their prior work and experience together, their com patible views, and their mutual desire to serve the campus as president and vice-president, re spectively. Allen concluded by say ing that, "I am confident that Larry McDevitt is the most quali fied candidate to serve as Speaker of the Student Legislature and as vice - president of the Student Body." tion counselors will be held Monday-Thursday of next week in the Grail and Woodhouse Rooms of Graham Memorial, Applications can be picked up at the Scuttlebutt, Y-Court, Gra ham Memorial, and the Reserve Reading Room of the library. These should be turned in at the Information desk at Graham Memorial by Sunday. Applicants can sign up for an interview at that time. Jobs For Wives . Student wives are wanted for temporary employment by the In- stitute for Research in Social Science beginning immediately and continuing until the end of the semester. The work involves the preparation of questionnaires to be mailed to teachers in the state. Preference will be given to those who can work four or more hours each day. The job will pay $1.18 an hour. Call Mrs. Myra Bass at 968-4411 or go to 301 Alumni Building. Lutheran Students The Lutheran Student Associa: tion will meet Sunday night at 6 for supper. A singing program will follow. .The council will meet Monday night at 6. Caving-Climbing ; The Cavmg-Climbing Club will meet Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. on the first floor of New East. Officers will be elected and a trip to Vir ginia will be planned. Manly Officers The following officers have been elected in Manly Dorm for the coming year: David Rouse, presi dent;: Henry Merrill, vice-president; Abner Moore, IDC represen-tativ. f to handle its problems," said Mathers in his endorsement. Experience - f - "Ernest Stepp has not had the necessary experience to run the DTH," he said. "Both Jim Clot felter and Chuck Wrye have had experience enough to put out a daily paper." Mathers received the highest vote total as a write-in candidate in last Tuesday's regular election. Clotfelter-Wrye placed second and were scheduled ta face Mathers : in a run-off, before he withdrew Wed nesday. ' ' Since the co-editor candidates failed to receive a majority of the votes cast, they have to face third highest Stepp. Statement Following is the full statement by Mathers: "Both Jim Clotfelter and Chuck Wrye have had experience enough to put out a daily paper. Because of the nature of this election I am sure that the co-editors will make every effort to publish a quality newspaper. "Even though I disagree with the political cpinons of Jim Clotfelter, it seems reasonable that Chuck Wrye will tend to temper Jim's views. The political opinions of the editors should be considered secondarily to their technical quali fications. Never Worked "Ernest Stepp has not had the necessary experience to' run the DTH. He admits that he has nev er worked on this paper. The DTH has special problems found in no other paper. It is a daily paper put out by students who are only able to give part of their day to working on the Tar Heel. . "A million other problems must be handled every day by the edi tor. Only persons with experience working on the Tar Heel are able to handle its problems. "These aspects taken into con sideration, I endorse Jim Clotfelter and Chuck Wrye for co-editors of the Daily Tar Heel." Stepp Is 111 Ernie Stepp, candidate for edi tor of the DTH in Tuesday's run off election, entered the Infirmary yesterday and said that he would be confined for three days with a virus infection. "I have already stated the is sues," he . said, "and I feel that the campus knows where I stand." Stepp said he expected to get out of the Infirmary late Monday af ternoon. WC Girls Attend Dance Here A group of 200 girls from Wom an's College are scheduled to at tend the freshman dance tonight in Woollen Gym at 8. Playing for the dance will be the Pedros; a combo from Mon roe. Admission will be $1 for boys, with girls admitted free. The dance is designed ' to cater primarily to freshmen, class, pub licity chairman Ellen Solomon has stated,. but upperclassmen will not be excluded.. . The dance will, last from 8-12, and refreshments will be served. U.S. Must Stay Strong Says Baxter The United States must stay militarily and economically strong, otherwise 185,000,000 Americans could become slaves of Russia, Dr. James Phinney Baxter III declar ed at the 1962 Weil Lecture Thurs day night. Russian concentration on war in struments "stems from a desire to dominate the world," he said. Americans must be ready for pro longed tension, uncertainty, anxie ty, and strain. Conceding that the United States will not strike first in an atomic war. Dr. Baxter, former President of Williams College, said the safe ty of the American people depends upon the ability of the United States to strike back swiftly and massively and thus deter the USSR from launching a missile attack on the United States. Shelters Are ' Useful Fall-out shelters are useful in maintenance of peace, he said, for such protection would reassure neutrals and Allies that we intend to strike back and destroy the ene my at any cost. The deterrent is the key, not only to keep the Russians from at tacking us, but in order to con vince the neutral nations of the world that the United States vill firmly keep its commitments to 40 nations with whom the U. S. has mutual-protection agreements, he stated. Prof. Baxter said there is little hope that the atomic bomb will be outlawed. "I have spent several years of my life studying the his tory of disarmament and it is gloomy reading, indeed, for a lover of peace. It is not too difficult to get the powers to rule out a weap on that holds little hope of a large military payoff, but it is quite another thing to rule out one that does." Deterrence Defense If the enemy is to be deterred from an attack on the United States he must realize, in his own mind, that he cannot win, said Dr. Baxter. "The defense policy of the United States rests on deter rence, based on a substantial mili tary superiority over the Russians. Remember that this concept rests on something that takes place in the enemy's mind, not in yours or mine," he said. He then told the story about the man who was approached by a bristling dog and remarked to a friend who tried to reassure him: "You know that the dog won't bite, and I know that he won't bite, but does the dog know?" The building of fall-out shelters is a basic part of the U. S. policy of deterrence, said Dr. Baxter. Fall-out shelters will have the in fluence of showing the Russians we intend to come back after they strike first. "It is our avowed national policy not to strike the first blow in a nuclear war," he said, "and because of this there is a temptation to a potential ag gressor to try for a devastating surprise. "Our defense against sneak at tack must include dispersal, radar warning against missiles as well as against manned bombers, hard ening of the - bases, anti-aircraft defense and anti-missile missiles, and maintenance of a portion - of our force airborne around - the clock and more of it on the ground alert. ' "Here as before the value of deterrent depends on what the ene my thinks about our second-strike capabilty. He must be certain not onlv that mir surviving Anft will bite, but that they will be numer-1 ous, mobile and strong enough for their bites to be fatal to him." Speaking of limited wars that might be inspired to deplete our strength and to "put out Isrush fires" in several parts of the world, Dr. Baxter spoke of U-SA. commitments to two score na tions. "In the neutral areas of the world doubts have been cx ( Continued on page 3) Free Flick Features Kim Novak "Bell, Book and Candle", starr ing James Stewart, Kim Novak, Jack Lemmon, Ernie Kovacs, Her mione . Gingold. ; Elsa Lanchester, and Janice Rule will be tonight's Free Flick presentation. The story tells ot a conventional bachelor "bewitched" on -the' eve of his wedding by his beautiful blonde neighbor. The "strange" antics and powers of Kim Novak and Jack Lemmon as the blonde and her brother are exceeded only by those of their relatives :-.! Showings win be in CaxrallillaH. at 7:30 and 9:3p. , Oj&rastedents with ID cards wjfl be araffcsrt. -j locnay Symposium Schedule THE CONCEPT OF REVOLUTION Sunday Night, April 1 8:00 P.M. Memorial Hall ' Dr. Crane Brinton, author and historian, Harvard Reception immediately following address in Graham Memorial v Monday Afternoon, April 2 3:00 P.M. Carroll Hall Panel Discussion: Race Relations Moderator Walter Spearman, Professor of Journalism, UNC Panel: Floyd McKissick, James Kilpatrick, Editor, McNeill Smith, Chairman, United States Civil Rights Commission REVOLUTION IN THE ARTS Monday Night, April 2 8:00 P.M. Memorial Hall Dr. Gilbert Seldes, critic, University of Pennsylvania Dr. John Grierson, Scottish Television Limited, Glasgow Tuesday Afternoon, April 3 2:00 P.M. Gerrard Hall Panel Discussion: Literature Moderator Charles Edge, Professor of English, UNC Panel: Charles Eaton, poet, Chapel Hill John Aldridge, critic and author, Hollins College Andrew Lytle, Editor, Sewanee Review 4:00 P.M. Ackland Art Museum . Panel Discussion: Art Moderator John Schnorrenberg, Art Historian, UNC , . Panel: John Sedgwick, artist, .Women's College, UNC Roy Gussow, sculpture, Professor of Design, North Carolina State POLITICAL REVOLUTIONS Tuesday Night, April 3 8:00 PjM. Memorial Hall Gale W. McGee, U. S. Senator Jrom Wyoming Reception immediately following address in Graham (Memorial Wednesday Afternoon, April 4 2:00 P.M. Carroll Hall Panel Discussion: Africa Moderator 5uy Johnson, Professor of Anthropology and Sociology Panel: Udo Oton, Information Officer, Nigerian Consulate General George Houser, Executive Director, American Committee on Africa Tartt iBell, Executive Secretary, American Friends Service Committee 4:00 P.M. Carroll Hall Address: Latin America Dr. George I. Blanksten, Professor of Political Science, Northwestern University SOCIAL AND SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTIONS Wednesday Night, April 4 8:00 P.M. (Memorial Hall Dr. Huston Smith, Professor of Philosophy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Dr. Samuel Kirkwood, Biochemist, University of Minnesota Reception immediately following address in Graham Memorial Thursday Afternoon, April 5 2:00 P.M. Gerrard Hall Address: Religion and Philosophy Dr. Roger Hazelton, Dean, Theological Seminary, Oberlin College 4:00 P.M. Gerrard Hall Address: Mass Media ' Richard Harkness, NBC News Commentator THE IMPACT OF TODAY'S REVOLUTIONS Thursday Night, April 5 8:00 P.M. Memorial Hall James B. Reston, Director, Times Reception immediately following address in Graham Memorial Dr. G. V. Taylor, Professor of History, will introduce the evening speakers. F. H. Weaver Addresses Meeting Fred H. Weaver, secretary of the Consolidated University, will give the president's address at the annual meeting of the National As sociation of Student Personnel Ad ministrators Monday in Philadel phia, Pa. As the outgoing president of the association of deans of students, Weaver will review the duties and goals of the association in hs ad dress, r UNC Professor of Social Work Alan Keith-Lucas has been invited to. address the four-day meeting of the association, on Monday. Pro fessor Keith-Lucas's address is en titled "Some Ideas on the Helping Process." The. talk will be a de scription of what it takes to help people and what it takes to re ceive help. Dr.: Keith-Lucas will be intro duced by UNC Dean of Student Af fairs Charles -Henderson Jr. Wil liam.G. Long, UNC assistant dean of Student Affairs,, will attend the mefttigg- as a delegate. . .;. -. : f ymposiuiii Theme NAACP attorney Richmond News Leader North Carolina Advisory Committee Washington Bureau, new xofk , f f,;' ' ' ' ' '"J" ' - "n- . y -- - - '' "V r , ? P .U5L.; . The UNC junior; varsity executing a scren field, pass io a. scriiainASe on. the Graham Memorial Revolution Brinton Opens Program With Speech Sunday . "Today's Revolutions," the 1962 Symposium, will be gin tomorrow night and." run .for. five days with a featured lecture in Memorial Hall each night and lectures and panel discussions in the afternoons. The afternoon programs will deal with specific prob lems on local, national and international levels. Dr. Crane (Brinton, author and, Harvard historian, will deliver the opening address to the 1962 Sym posium on Sunday evening at 8:00 p.m. in Memorial Hall. His speech, "Some Concepts of Revolution," will deal with the origin and bases of revolutions in our modern West ern environment. Race Relations Panel At 3:00 p.m. on Monday, April 2, the first panel discussion on race relations and problems will take place in Carroll Hall. Partici pating in the discussion will be Floyd B. McKissick, NAACP law yer from Durham; Jack Kilpatrick, editor of the "Richmond News Leader," and McNeill Smith, for mer UNC student and Chairman of the State Advisory Commission on Civil Riahts. In addition to Carolina students and members of the University community, students from 16 dif- Ribicof f Announces Racial Policy WASHINGTON ( UPI ) Secretary Abraham A. Ribicoff made a sur prise announcement Friday that the Kennedy administration plans to take its first direct action against racial segregation in the nation's schools. In a statement that drew im mediate fire from Southern Demo crats in Congress, Ribicoff said his Health, Education and Welfare Department will cut off some fed eral aid next year to certain segre gated schools attended by the chil dren of servicemen and govern ment workers livng on federal in stallations. Integrated s c ho o 1 s would be provided for the young sters, j Ribicoff also said the Justice De partment was considering legal ac tion aimed at ending all such "im pacted areas" assistance to seg regated schools. The political effect of Ribicoff s statement, which came as a com plete surprise to Congress, was expected to be immediate and troublesome for some of Presi dent Kennedy's key legislative pro posals such as his liberal trade plan and medical care programs. Depending On South To win congressional approval, Kennedy is depending heavily on support from Southern Democrats. So far, the Southerners have dis played a willingness to be wooed. But Sen. Strom Thurmond, D S. C, said the aid cut-off "con stitutes a flagrant act of economic blackmail." " ' ferent colleges and universities throughout the South and East will attend ' the programs. These stu dents, over 20 in number, are coming to Carolina as a part of the Intercollegiate Seminars Pro gram and will attend the first three days of the Symposium. Special classes and closed meet ings with university professors and the featured speakers are being arranged for the Seminar students during Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday mornings. Larger Audience In order to increase the audience participation in this area, WUNC TV, the Chapel Hill educational television station, will carry the series of evening lectures through out the week except Wednesday. The programs will begin at 8:00 p.m. on Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday and will continue for the duration of the main speech and the subsequent question and answer period. Persons in the Memorial Hall audience will be encouraged to write down any questions which may occur during the speech. Dr. G. V. Taylor, professor of History, will introduce the speakers and will preside over the question and answer period. Senior High t Is oncer Sunday Greensboro Senior High School's award-winning 80 - piece orchestra will play here Sunday afternoon in a free concert in Hill Hall at 4. The program will include clas sical selections from Beethoven and Saint-Saens, and several more modern compositions. An original composition by John Barnes Chance will be a featured part of the con cert. Chance is a Ford Foundation composer now in residence with the Greensboro High School. music department. He has been writing music for the school's musical groups for the past two years. The orchestra is nationally rec ognized, having played for the Gold en Anniversary Convention of the Music Educators National Confer ence in St. Louis in 1956. In 1959, the group played before the South ern Division meeting of the Con ference in Richmond. The concert is being sponsored by the Phi Mu Alpha music fra ternity. Photo by Zalk
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 31, 1962, edition 1
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